President Donald Trump said on Thursday he will leave the White House if the Electoral College votes for Joe Biden, the closest he has come to conceding the Nov. 3 election, even as he reiterated his unfounded claims of massive voter fraud.
Speaking to reporters on the Thanksgiving holiday, Republican Trump said if Democrat Biden - who is due to be sworn in on Jan. 20 - is certified the election winner by the Electoral College, he will depart the White House.
But a defiant Trump said it would be hard for him to concede under the current circumstances, and he declined to say whether he would attend Biden's inauguration. The electors are scheduled to meet on Dec. 14.
"This election was a fraud," Trump insisted, as he has declared repeatedly.
Biden and Trump both stayed close to home to celebrate Thanksgiving on Thursday as the coronavirus pandemic raged across the country.
Biden spent the holiday in the small seaside town of Rehoboth, Delaware, where he and his wife, Jill, have a vacation home. The Bidens are hosting daughter Ashley Biden and her husband Dr. Howard Krein for the holiday meal.
The former vice president, appearing with his wife in a video message posted to his Twitter account on Thanksgiving, said his family typically holds a large gathering on the island of Nantucket off Massachusetts, but would remain in Delaware this year "with just a small group around our dinner table" because of the pandemic.
In the presidential-style address to a nation that has lost more than 260,000 lives to the coronavirus, the Democrat said Americans were making a "shared sacrifice for the whole country" and a "statement of common purpose" by staying at home with their immediate families.
"I know this isn't the way many of us hoped we'd spend our holiday. We know that a small act of staying home is a gift to our fellow Americans," said Biden. "I know better days are coming."
Republican President Trump often likes to celebrate holidays at his Mar-a-Largo resort in Florida. But on Thursday he remained in the Washington area, spending part of the morning at his Trump National Golf Club in Virginia where he played a round of golf.
It was a far cry from last year when he made a surprise visit to Afghanistan, where he served turkey to U.S. troops before sitting down to eat Thanksgiving dinner with them.
This time, Trump spoke by video link from the White House to members of the military.
As far as the Electoral College goes, Biden looks to be ahead, with well over the 270 electors needed to secure the presidency. But the Trump campaign and its allies have filed multiple legal challenges to the tallies in several battleground states, alleging widespread and systemic fraud, voting machine irregularities, and more. Though most of the challenges have failed in the courts, they continue to run their course.
Earlier this week, Biden, delivering a statement of national unity ahead of Thanksgiving, asserted that Americans would not tolerate any plan to subvery their will.
"In America, we have full and fair and free elections, and then we honor the results," he said. "The people of this nation and the laws of the land won't stand for anything else."
Multiple mainstream news outlets have called the election for Biden. Newsmax has not. It has been holding off pending the outcomes of legal challenges and state vote certifications. Some of those are also being challenged.
Newsmax's Jeffrey Rubin contributed to this report.
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